About
It is a love story between a reformed criminal and a married doctor.
Radha has learned how to survive in silence. The violence of his past does not shout anymore, but it never leaves. Redemption, for him, is not a clean escape. It is a daily act of restraint, a choice to stop when the world expects him to strike.
Krishna lives among the wounded. As a doctor, she carries the suffering of strangers with steady hands and a guarded heart. Married and bound by duty, she believes love must be disciplined, controlled, and contained. She does not expect it to find her again.
When their paths cross, the connection is quiet but undeniable. No declarations. No promises. Just a pull neither of them can explain or escape. In each other, they recognize something broken and something still worth saving.
Around them is a society ruled by power and silence. Justice bends. Truth is negotiated. Innocence is fragile. Love, when it appears in the wrong place, becomes dangerous.
Every meeting risks exposure. Every moment demands a choice. To step back into safety or step forward into truth. To protect the lives they have built or surrender to what feels unbearably real.
This is not a story of rebellion or rescue. It is a story of restraint, of moral courage, of love that refuses to be careless even when it aches to exist.
Radha Krishna is a deeply human novel about forbidden love and the cost of conscience. Set against the harsh beauty of modern India, it unfolds like a slow burning film that lingers long after the final scene fades to black.
Some love stories are meant to survive the world.
Some survive only within the heart.
Radha has learned how to survive in silence. The violence of his past does not shout anymore, but it never leaves. Redemption, for him, is not a clean escape. It is a daily act of restraint, a choice to stop when the world expects him to strike.
Krishna lives among the wounded. As a doctor, she carries the suffering of strangers with steady hands and a guarded heart. Married and bound by duty, she believes love must be disciplined, controlled, and contained. She does not expect it to find her again.
When their paths cross, the connection is quiet but undeniable. No declarations. No promises. Just a pull neither of them can explain or escape. In each other, they recognize something broken and something still worth saving.
Around them is a society ruled by power and silence. Justice bends. Truth is negotiated. Innocence is fragile. Love, when it appears in the wrong place, becomes dangerous.
Every meeting risks exposure. Every moment demands a choice. To step back into safety or step forward into truth. To protect the lives they have built or surrender to what feels unbearably real.
This is not a story of rebellion or rescue. It is a story of restraint, of moral courage, of love that refuses to be careless even when it aches to exist.
Radha Krishna is a deeply human novel about forbidden love and the cost of conscience. Set against the harsh beauty of modern India, it unfolds like a slow burning film that lingers long after the final scene fades to black.
Some love stories are meant to survive the world.
Some survive only within the heart.
